Pages

Sunday, January 13, 2013

Debt Favors

The Method of Impoverishment

~ We will soon suffer the endless Kabuki of sham fiscal cliff politics. It will be frustrating and feckless in appearance to most of us, but the wealthy and powerful will be well-served. We are in the midst of an economic struggle for survival which Warren Buffet famously characterized so:

Load economies (governments, companies and families) with debt, siphon off their income as debt service and then foreclose when debtors lack the means to pay. Indebting government gives creditors a lever to pry away land, public infrastructure and other property in the public domain... The aim of financial warfare is not merely to acquire land, natural resources and key infrastructure rents as in military warfare; it is to centralize creditor control over society.

The first step is to restrain, reduce and roll back income. Wages for working and middle-class people have been stagnant in real terms for decades. To replace that purchasing power, people have been enticed by all manner of loans and credit offers for houses, for cars, for education, for routine expenses, for fun. Assured we could have it all, growth in debt of all kinds has mushroomed. As the burden of servicing that debt has grown, the appeal to debtors of reducing costs has become irresistible. But what costs? Food, energy, education, housing, and of course, interest expense have grown, often hugely. No, we've been hoodwinked into thinking cutting taxes is the way to repair our cash shortage.

The emerging financial oligarchy seeks to shift taxes off banks and their major customers (real estate, natural resources and monopolies) onto labor. Given the need to win voter acquiescence, this aim is best achieved by rolling back everyone’s taxes... Financial lobbyists quickly discovered that the easiest ploy to shift the cost of social programs onto labor is to conceal new taxes as user fees, using the proceeds to cut taxes for the elite 1%. This fiscal sleight-of-hand was the aim of the 1983 Greenspan Commission. It confused people into thinking that government budgets are like family budgets, concealing the fact that governments can finance their spending by creating their own money. They do not have to borrow, or even to tax (at least, not tax mainly the 99%).

Next—so-called "entitlement reform" which is not reform, but instead the burdening of the many with debt for the enrichment of the few. It is an austerity which is anything but shared.

The Greenspan tax shift played on the fact that most people see the need to save for their own retirement. The carefully crafted and well-subsidized deception at work is that Social Security requires a similar pre-funding – by raising wage withholding. The trick is to convince wage earners it is fair to tax them more to pay for government social spending, yet not also to ask the banking sector to pay similar a user fee to pre-save for the next time it itself will need bailouts to cover its losses. Also asymmetrical is the fact that nobody suggests that the government set up a fund to pay for future wars, so that future adventures such as Iraq or Afghanistan will not “run a deficit” to burden the budget. So the first deception is to treat only Social Security and medical care as user fees. The second is to aggravate matters by insisting that such fees be paid long in advance, by pre-saving.

The final act is accelerating privatization.

By not raising taxes on the wealthy or using the central bank to monetize spending on anything except bailing out the banks and subsidizing the financial sector, the government follows a pro-creditor policy. Tax favoritism for the wealthy deepens the budget deficit, forcing governments to borrow more. Paying interest on this debt diverts revenue from being spent on goods and services. This fiscal austerity shrinks markets, reducing tax revenue to the brink of default. This enables bondholders to treat the government in the same way that banks treat a bankrupt family, forcing the debtor to sell off assets – in this case the public domain as if it were the family silver, as Britain’s Prime Minister Harold MacMillan characterized Margaret Thatcher’s privatization sell-offs.

In this context, it's not hard to take a guess at how the politics around our economic problems will play out:

More government functions will be outsourced. We've privatized prisons, parts of our national labs, and much of our military. Expect more in these areas and inroads in others, especially the investigatory and regulatory apparatus of the Departments of Energy, Interior, Commerce, and Transportation. Others will be sure to follow.

More user fees. Everything for which government charges citizens has become more expensive—airline fees, passports, inspections, tolls, licenses, national parks, and too many more to list. Those outsourced through privatization will rise even faster.

Taxes will rise, but unevenly. Fiscal Cliff 1 preserved income tax cuts but raised taxes on wages. Fiscal Cliff 2 will reinforce that basic choice. While it would make eminent economic sense to tax speculation rather than labor, that won't happen.

Privatizing Social Security is an idea that never goes away, and it will keep coming back in one form or another until Wall Street has its hooks in it. Once that camel's nose is under the tent, the whole camel's coming in—at length it will be gone in fact if not in name.

Lastly, the forces at work here are playing a long game. These ideas keep coming back and back until they win, and in many areas, once won, there's no going back. When our national silver is sold we won't ever be buying it back.

2 comments:

Every year, even every quarter, when bank profits are announced, people scream and rend their hair... for (perhaps, at best) less than two days? And then, hearing the baby cry, the car not start, or any of the 10,000 mundane distractions, but mostly feeling powerless to address it, we put it out if mind and move on. On the other hand, Media tales of Union fat cats always inspire action. Most of those opposed to the teachers in the recent Ontario showdown, only showed their ignorance of the real issue. Likewise, those who describe last year's job action by the Posties as a strike rather than lockout turned into opening act for draconian government legislation, got the song and dance they were fed but missed the real story (Heather Malick raised the spectre of Martin Niemoller, but who's listening?). It's easier to drag down the guy ahead of you than go after the guy throwing rocks from the roof of a tall building to which you don't have the key.Everywhere the cry of "wage freeze" but no one saying "profit freeze".Do we approach the point when our lack of bread will have them suggesting we eat cake? Please? So what's the realistic solution to a financial sector that now sucks 7.5% out of GDP, compared to 3% half a century ago, while adding nothing of real value?

I posited a movie plot: serial sniper targets anyone making more than $10M/yr... then begins lowering his standard, lol, meanwhile inspiring copycats and getting a message out about the true nature of this war. I even had a great title which I didn't write down and have forgotten; but a few come to mind: Severance PackageExecutive CompensationIn Debt We TrustDeath and TaxesTrigger Economics

I am almost astonished that the usurers have taken over the temple and no one is calling them on it. What kind of christian countries do we have here? Oh, right, hypocritical, judgemental pretenders.Sorry buddy, I've slipped into ADD soapbox mode.

Meanwhile, I do have a couple of venture concepts I'd be willing to discuss with you in the not too distant.And, can you still put your leg around the back of your head?

Nice soap box you got there Jeremy! I've said for years that, when it comes to politics, the half-life of recall of most Americans is measured in days. After a month almost no one remembers anything. There's always a new circus.

You'll never get that film funded, but I do like the title Executive Compensation.

Helping people realize their dreams in new ventures is what I do. Let me know when you want to discuss further. I am tentatively planning a trip to Ontario for this summer; we'll see.

And yes, especially with a few years of Bikram yoga practice, I can still do a variety of stupid human tricks.